US researchers found that the neck joint of a common American field ant can withstand pressures up to 5,000 times the ant's weight.
"Ants are impressive mechanical systems - astounding, really," said Carlos Castro, assistant professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering at The Ohio State University.
"Before we started, we made a somewhat conservative estimate that they might withstand 1,000 times their weight, and it turned out to be much more," Castro said.
They imaged ants with electron microscopy and X-rayed them with micro-computed tomography (micro-CT) machines.
They placed the ants in a refrigerator to anaesthetise them, then glued them face-down in a specially designed centrifuge to measure the force necessary to deform the neck and eventually rupture the head from the body.
The centrifuge worked on the same principle as a common carnival ride called "the rotor". In the rotor, a circular room spins until centrifugal force pins people to the wall and the floor drops out.
The centrifuge spun up to hundreds of rotations per second, each increase in speed exerting more outward force on the ant.
At forces corresponding to 350 times the ants' body weight, the neck joint began to stretch and the body lengthened. The ants' necks ruptured at forces of 3,400-5,000 times their average body weight.
Micro-CT scans revealed the soft tissue structure of the neck and its connection to the hard exoskeleton of the head and body.
"Other insects have similar micro-scale structures, and we think that they might play some kind of mechanical role," Castro said.
The research could lead to micro-sized robots that combine soft and hard parts, as the ant's body does. Much work in robotics today involves assembling small, autonomous devices that can work together, researchers said.
The study was published in the Journal of Biomechanics.
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